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1.
Human HYPK (Huntingtin Yeast-two-hybrid Protein K) is an intrinsically unstructured chaperone-like protein with no sequence homology to known chaperones. HYPK is also known to be a part of ribosome-associated protein complex and present in polysomes. The objective of the present study was to investigate the evolutionary influence on HYPK primary structure and its impact on the protein’s function. Amino acid sequence analysis revealed 105 orthologs of human HYPK from plants, lower invertebrates to mammals. C-terminal part of HYPK was found to be particularly conserved and to contain nascent polypeptide-associated alpha subunit (NPAA) domain. This region experiences highest selection pressure, signifying its importance in the structural and functional evolution. NPAA domain of human HYPK has unique amino acid composition preferring glutamic acid and happens to be more stable from a conformational point of view having higher content of α-helices than the rest. Cell biology studies indicate that overexpressed C-terminal human HYPK can interact with nascent proteins, co-localizes with huntingtin, increases cell viability and decreases caspase activities in Huntington’s disease (HD) cell culture model. This domain is found to be required for the chaperone-like activity of HYPK in vivo. Our study suggested that by virtue of its flexibility and nascent peptide binding activity, HYPK may play an important role in assisting protein (re)folding.  相似文献   

2.
The hemolysin-like protein (HLP) Sll1951, characterized by the GGXGXDXUX nonapeptide motif implicated in Ca(2+) binding, was purified from the glucose-tolerant strain (GT) of Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. HLP was eluted at 560 kDa after gel filtration chromatography. Atomic absorption spectroscopy indicated that the protein bound calcium. The bound Ca(2+) was not chelated with EGTA; however, it was released after being heated at 100 degrees C for 1 min, and it rebound to the Ca(2+)-depleted protein at room temperature. The apparent HLP molecular mass increased to 1,000 kDa and reverted to 560 kDa during the release and rebinding of Ca(2+), respectively. The monomers of the respective forms appeared at 90 and 200 kDa after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. HLP showed no apparent hemolytic activity against sheep erythrocytes; however, a slight hemolytic activity was detected during the conformational change caused by the rebinding of Ca(2+). Immunoelectron microscopy using polyclonal antibodies against the 200-kDa monomer revealed that HLP is located in the cell surface layer. The localization and Ca(2+)-induced reversible conformational change suggest that HLP is a member of the repeat in toxin (RTX) protein family despite its latent and low toxicity. In some other cyanobacteria, RTX proteins are reported to be necessary for cell motility. However, the GT was immotile. Moreover, the motile wild-type strain did not express any HLP, suggesting that HLP is one of the factors involved in the elimination of motility in the GT. We concluded that the involvement of RTX protein in cyanobacterial cell motility is not a general feature.  相似文献   

3.
Huntingtin (Htt) mutation causes Huntington's disease.Sequence analysis of Htt revealed apossible thrombin cleavage site in the N-terminal region of Htt.In order to investigate if thrombin can eleaveHtt,we expressed the N-terminal fragment (1-969) of wild-type (wt) Htt (Htt 1-969) in MCF-7 cells andstudied its cleavage pattern by thrombin in vitro.An expression plasmid pcDNA3-Htt-18Q-969 was used totransfect MCF-cells and Htt 1-969 expression was confirmed with immunofluorescence.Cell lysates wereincubated with thrombin (1 U/ml, 10 U/ml,and 30 U/ml) for 1 h in the presence or absence of hirudin,athrombin inhibitor.Htt fragments were separated by sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis(SDS-PAGE) and detected with anti-Htt antibodies. An Htt fragment with molecular mass of approximately80 kDa was produced after incubation with thrombin.The size of this Htt fragment was anticipated bymolecular mass generated from thrombin-mediated cleavage at the amino acid 183 in the Htt.Production ofan 80 kDa fragment was inhibited by hirudin. This study provides the first evidence that Htt is cleaved bythrombin in vitro at amino acid 183.If endogenous thrombin cleaves Htt in vivo,the physiological significanceof thrombin-mediated cleavage of Htt should be further investigated.  相似文献   

4.
The human NatA protein Nα-terminal-acetyltransferase complex is responsible for cotranslational N-terminal acetylation of proteins with Ser, Ala, Thr, Gly, and Val N termini. The NatA complex is composed of the catalytic subunit hNaa10p (hArd1) and the auxiliary subunit hNaa15p (hNat1/NATH). Using immunoprecipitation coupled with mass spectrometry, we identified endogenous HYPK, a Huntingtin (Htt)-interacting protein, as a novel stable interactor of NatA. HYPK has chaperone-like properties preventing Htt aggregation. HYPK, hNaa10p, and hNaa15p were associated with polysome fractions, indicating a function of HYPK associated with the NatA complex during protein translation. Knockdown of both hNAA10 and hNAA15 decreased HYPK protein levels, possibly indicating that NatA is required for the stability of HYPK. The biological importance of HYPK was evident from HYPK-knockdown HeLa cells displaying apoptosis and cell cycle arrest in the G0/G1 phase. Knockdown of HYPK or hNAA10 resulted in increased aggregation of an Htt-enhanced green fluorescent protein (Htt-EGFP) fusion with expanded polyglutamine stretches, suggesting that both HYPK and NatA prevent Htt aggregation. Furthermore, we demonstrated that HYPK is required for N-terminal acetylation of the known in vivo NatA substrate protein PCNP. Taken together, the data indicate that the physical interaction between HYPK and NatA seems to be of functional importance both for Htt aggregation and for N-terminal acetylation.Nα-terminal acetylation is among the most common protein modifications in eukaryotes, occurring on ∼50% of Saccharomyces cerevisiae proteins and ∼80% of human proteins (12). In yeast, four types of Nα-terminal acetyltransferases (NATs) have been defined (NatA-NatD), while a fifth type, NatE, has been hypothesized (21, 32-34, 38). For humans, NatA, NatB, NatC, and NatE were recently presented (2, 4, 18, 39, 40). A revised NAT-subunit nomenclature was recently introduced in order to have identical names for orthologous subunits from different species, and each gene was denoted NAA (Nα-acetyltransferase) followed by a number depending on Nat type and the type of subunit (catalytic/auxiliary) (32). The major human NAT complex, hNatA, is composed of the catalytic subunit hNaa10p (previously named hArd1) and the auxiliary subunit hNaa15p (hNat1/NATH) (4). Human NatA is evolutionarily conserved from the yeast complex in terms of subunit composition and substrate specificity (12, 26, 28). However, in contrast to yeast cells, human cells potentially contain several distinct NatA complexes due to the presence of two genes for each of the two NatA subunits, NAA10 and NAA15 (6, 8). Protein N-terminal acetylation occurs on the ribosome when the nascent polypeptide emerges (21, 29, 30, 41, 42). Proteins with Ser, Thr, Gly, Ala, Val, or Cys N termini are potential substrates of NatA (12), while NatB and NatC potentially acetylate specific classes of substrates that still carry the initiator Met (34). The biological importance of the human NatA complex was evident from knockdown experiments where induction of apoptosis and growth arrest of cells in the G1/G0 phase were the resulting phenotypes (9, 11, 20, 25). The phenotypes induced by hNatA depletion most likely reflect the fact that one or more specific substrate proteins lack proper Nα acetylation, in view of the fact that a large quantitative proteomic analysis of the acetylation status of protein N termini in hNaa15p-hNaa10p knockdown cells revealed a decrease in the level of Nα acetylation of some partially acetylated substrates compared to that in control cells (12).To further characterize the human NatA complex, we looked for the presence of stable interaction partners of hNaa15p and hNaa10p. Here we present data identifying the Huntingtin (Htt) yeast two-hybrid protein K (HYPK) as a novel factor involved in cotranslational NatA acetylation. HYPK, originally identified in a yeast two-hybrid screen during a search for potential interaction partners for the Huntingtin protein (19), was recently found to reduce Htt polyglutamine (polyQ) aggregation upon overexpression (36). However, the role of the endogenous HYPK protein has yet to be revealed. We demonstrate that endogenous HYPK (i) stably interacts with the hNaa10p-hNaa15p NatA N-terminal-acetyltransferase complex and with ribosomes, (ii) is required for normal N-terminal acetylation of a NatA substrate, (iii) is important for cell survival independent of Htt polyQ, and (iv) is important for the prevention of Htt polyQ aggregation. Furthermore, NatA is essential for the proper expression of HYPK protein and modulates Htt polyQ aggregation.  相似文献   

5.
Protein aggregates result from altered structural conformations and they can perturb cellular homeostasis. Prevention mechanisms, which function against protein aggregation by modulatory processes, are diverse and redundant. In this study, we have characterized Huntingtin interacting protein K (HYPK) as a global aggregation-regulatory protein. We report the mechanistic details of how HYPK's aggregation-prone regions allow it to sense and prevent other toxic protein's aggregation by forming unique annular-shaped sequestration complexes. Screenings for interacting partners of different aggregation-prone proteins identify HYPK as a global interacting partner/regulator of Huntingtin97Qexon1, α-Synuclein-A53T and Superoxide dismutase1-G93A. C-terminal hydrophobic region in HYPK makes direct contacts with aggregates to initiate the formation of sequestration complexes. HYPK acts as aggregate sensor by existing in a seeded amyloid-like state which also favors its own concentration-dependent self-oligomerization. Oligomerization of HYPK leads to annular and non-fibrillar/amorphous aggregates. Two hydrophobic segments in the C-terminus of HYPK are responsible for its own aggregations. Self-association of HYPK follows seed nucleation, in which oligomeric HYPK seeds nucleate to annular structures. Annular oligomers of HYPK fuse with each other to form amorphous aggregates. HYPK shows differential interactions with aggregation-prone and non-aggregating proteins, as it preferentially binds to aggregation-prone proteins with higher affinity than native/non-aggregating proteins. This favors the formation of HYPK's sequestration complexes both in cytosol and in ribosome. Besides having aggregation-preventive property, HYPK also reduces the cellular level of toxic proteins. In vivo, HYPK sequestration complexes prevent the formation of toxic protein aggregates to physiologically show positive impact on cell survival and restoration of normal cell physiology.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Aspartate kinase (AK) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been characterized to elucidate its quaternary structure and the effect of the allosteric inhibitor threonine on the enzyme conformation. The homogeneously purified enzyme was inhibited by threonine (K(i) 1.4 mM) and was found to bind this compound (K(d) 0.97 mM) in a hyperbolic manner. Gel filtration and native gel electrophoresis indicated that yeast AK is a homohexamer of 346 kDa composed by 58 kDa subunits. Threonine caused a decrease in the apparent molecular mass of AK as evidenced by size-exclusion chromatography (from 345 to 280 kDa) and blue native gel electrophoresis (from 346 to 297 kDa); no other molecular species were detected. This shift in the hydrodynamic size was threonine-specific and was reversed by rechromatography in the absence of threonine. No change in the apparent molecular mass was induced by threonine in an AK mutant insensitive to inhibition by this amino acid, which was observed to be unable to bind threonine. These results indicate that the allosteric transition elicited by binding of threonine to yeast AK involves a large conformational change of the protein that isomerizes from a relaxed active conformation to a more compact inactive one of smaller molecular dimensions.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Brevin, an actin-severing protein present in serum from numerous mammals, has been purified to homogeneity from bovine serum, using hydrophobic chromatography as the last purification step. The physicochemical parameters of brevin have been established and some of them studied in the absence and presence of Ca2+. Brevin exhibits an apparent Stokes radius, Rs, of 3.4 nm, an intrinsic sedimentation coefficient S degrees 20, W, of 4.8 S and 4.4 S in the absence and presence of Ca2+ respectively, indicative of calcium-induced conformational change. The native molecular mass of brevin was found to be 68 kDa and the hydrodynamic data suggest that the protein is an asymmetric molecule. Sedimentation equilibrium studies demonstrated that Ca2+ affects the shape (asymmetry) of brevin without altering its molecular mass. Limited tryptic and chymotryptic digestion of brevin distinguishes the Ca2+-induced conformation from the EGTA one. No change in the electrophoretic migration of brevin was seen upon Ca2+ addition. Several isoforms were detected by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Brevin increases the rate of nucleation of actin but decreases the rate of elongation of the filaments and the steady-state viscosity of F-actin in substoichiometric amounts, as measured by viscometric assays under high shear conditions. Electron microscopic examination documents these effects. Brevin produces shorter actin filaments and binds to the 'barbed' end of filaments to which monomers add preferentially during elongation, as demonstrated by indirect immunogold staining of antibodies against brevin. Filament elongation occurs only at the slowly growing end. An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was developed and used to detect and quantify brevin and related proteins in extracts of different bovine cells and tissues. Liver and smooth muscles were found to contain the highest amounts of the severing protein.  相似文献   

10.
Protein conformational maladies such as Huntington Disease are characterized by accumulation of intracellular and extracellular protein inclusions containing amyloid-like proteins. There is an inverse correlation between proteotoxicity and aggregation, so facilitated protein aggregation appears cytoprotective. To define mechanisms for protective protein aggregation, a screen for suppressors of nuclear huntingtin (Htt103Q) toxicity was conducted. Nuclear Htt103Q is highly toxic and less aggregation prone than its cytosolic form, so we identified suppressors of cytotoxicity caused by Htt103Q tagged with a nuclear localization signal (NLS). High copy suppressors of Htt103Q-NLS toxicity include the polyQ-domain containing proteins Nab3, Pop2, and Cbk1, and each suppresses Htt toxicity via a different mechanism. Htt103Q-NLS appears to inactivate the essential functions of Nab3 in RNA processing in the nucleus. Function of Pop2 and Cbk1 is not impaired by nuclear Htt103Q, as their respective polyQ-rich domains are sufficient to suppress Htt103Q toxicity. Pop2 is a subunit of an RNA processing complex and is localized throughout the cytoplasm. Expression of just the Pop2 polyQ domain and an adjacent proline-rich stretch is sufficient to suppress Htt103Q toxicity. The proline-rich domain in Pop2 resembles an aggresome targeting signal, so Pop2 may act in trans to positively impact spatial quality control of Htt103Q. Cbk1 accumulates in discrete perinuclear foci and overexpression of the Cbk1 polyQ domain concentrates diffuse Htt103Q into these foci, which correlates with suppression of Htt toxicity. Protective action of Pop2 and Cbk1 in spatial quality control is dependent upon the Hsp70 co-chaperone Sti1, which packages amyloid-like proteins into benign foci. Protein:protein interactions between Htt103Q and its intracellular neighbors lead to toxic and protective outcomes. A subset of polyQ-rich proteins buffer amyloid toxicity by funneling toxic aggregation intermediates to the Hsp70/Sti1 system for spatial organization into benign species.  相似文献   

11.
Huntington disease is a dominantly inherited neurodegenerative condition caused by polyglutamine expansion in the N terminus of the huntingtin protein (Htt). The first 17 amino acids (N17) of Htt play a key role in regulating its toxicity and aggregation. Both nuclear export and cytoplasm retention functions have been ascribed to N17. We have determined that N17 acts as a nuclear export sequence (NES) within Htt exon and when fused to yellow fluorescent protein. We have defined amino acids within N17 that constitute the nuclear export sequence (NES). Mutation of any of the conserved residues increases nuclear accumulation of Htt exon 1. Nuclear export of Htt is sensitive to leptomycin B and is reduced by knockdown of exportin 1. In HEK293 cells, NES mutations decrease overall Htt aggregation but increase the fraction of cells with nuclear inclusions. In primary cultured neurons, NES mutations increase nuclear accumulation and increase overall aggregation. This work defines a bona fide nuclear export sequence within N17 and links it to effects on protein aggregation. This may help explain the important role of N17 in controlling Htt toxicity.  相似文献   

12.
A major protein of the endotoxin from Yersinia pseudotuberculosis was isolated from the complex lipid A--protein by treatment with SDS and triton X-100 followed by gel-chromatography on Sephacryl S-300. Protein has apparent molecular mass 40 kDa and alanine as N-terminal amino acid residue. CD and IR spectroscopy conformational changes of the protein molecule in the process of its isolation. The thermal and pH stabilities of the protein were investigated by the methods of intrinsic fluorescence and differential scanning microcalorimetry. The isolated protein revealed two thermal transitions (at 30-35 and 50-55 degrees C), which depend on Ca2+ concentration.  相似文献   

13.
A calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (Ca/calmodulin protein kinase) was purified from rat pancreas using hydrophobic chromatography followed by gel filtration and affinity chromatography. Ca/calmodulin protein kinase from pancreas resembled previously described multifunctional Ca/calmodulin protein kinases from other tissues with respect to substrate specificity, autophosphorylation on serine and threonine residues, and catalytic and hydrodynamic properties. While Ca/calmodulin protein kinase from other tissues contains subunits of 53-60 kDa with variable proportions of a smaller 50-52 kDa subunit, pancreatic Ca/calmodulin protein kinase was found to contain a single component of 51 kDa. Experiments mixing brain Ca/calmodulin protein kinase with pancreatic homogenate suggest that the absence of a larger subunit in the pancreatic Ca/calmodulin protein kinase is not due to proteolytic degradation during enzyme preparation. Ca/calmodulin protein kinase binding to 125I-labeled calmodulin in solution was demonstrated using the photoaffinity cross-linker, N-hydroxysuccinimidyl-4-azidobenzoate. 125I-labeled calmodulin binding to Ca/calmodulin protein kinase was also demonstrated using filters containing Ca/calmodulin protein kinase transferred from polyacrylamide gels after two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Finally, the ribosomal substrate for Ca/calmodulin protein kinase was identified as the ribosomal protein, S6. The purification procedure presented in this study promises to be useful in characterizing Ca/calmodulin protein kinase in other tissues and in clarifying the role of these enzymes in cellular function.  相似文献   

14.
Phosphorylation of several low molecular mass proteins (3.5, 17, 23 and 29kDa) was observed in rat brain mitochondria (RBM) at ATP concentration close to that in the mitochondrial matrix. Furthermore, regulatory effects of Ca2+ on phosphorylation of these proteins were investigated. Protein phosphorylation was found to be modulated by Ca2+ in the physiological concentration range (10(-8) to 10(-6)M free Ca2+). Incorporation of 32P from [gamma-32P]ATP into the 17kDa protein was dramatically increased within the 10(-7) to 10(-6)M free Ca2+ range, whereas an opposite effect was observed for the 3.5kDa polypeptide. Strong de-phosphorylation of the 3.5kDa polypeptide and enhanced 32P-incorporation into the 17 and 23kDa proteins were found with supra-threshold Ca2+ loads and these effects were eliminated or reduced in the presence of cyclosporin A, an inhibitor of Permeability Transition Pore (PTP) opening. In the presence of calmidazolium (Cmz), a calmodulin antagonist, enhanced levels of phosphorylation of the 17 and 3.5kDa polypeptides were observed and the 17kDa protein phosphorylation was suppressed by H-8, a protein kinase A inhibitor. It is concluded that Ca2+ in physiological concentrations, as a second messenger, can control phosphorylation of the low molecular mass phospoproteins in RBM, in addition to well known regulation of some Krebs cycle dehydrogenases by Ca2+. The protein phosphorylation was strongly dependent on the Ca2+-induced PTP opening.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Huntington''s disease (HD) is the most common inherited neurodegenerative disease and is characterized by uncontrolled excessive motor movements and cognitive and emotional deficits. The mutation responsible for HD leads to an abnormally long polyglutamine (polyQ) expansion in the huntingtin (Htt) protein, which confers one or more toxic functions to mutant Htt leading to neurodegeneration. The polyQ expansion makes Htt prone to aggregate and accumulate, and manipulations that mitigate protein misfolding or facilitate the clearance of misfolded proteins tend to slow disease progression in HD models. This article will focus on HD and the evidence that it is a conformational disease.  相似文献   

17.
Huntington’s disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder caused by aggregation of mutant huntingtin (mHtt), and removal of mHtt is expected as a potential therapeutic option. We previously reported protein knockdown of Htt by using hybrid small molecules (Htt degraders) consisting of BE04, a ligand of ubiquitin ligase (E3), linked to probes for protein aggregates. Here, in order to examine the effect of changing the ligand, we synthesized a similar Htt degrader utilizing MV1, an antagonist of the inhibitor of apoptosis protein (IAP) family (a subgroup of ubiquitin E3 ligases), which is expected to have a higher affinity and specificity for IAP, as compared with BE04. The MV1-based hybrid successfully induced interaction between Htt aggregates and IAP, and reduced mHtt levels in living cells. Its mode of action was confirmed to be the same as that of the BE04-based hybrid. However, although the affinity of MV1 for IAP is greater than that of BE04, the efficacy of Htt degradation by the MV1-based molecule was lower, suggesting that linker length between the ligand and probe might be an important determinant of efficacy.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Huntingtin (Htt) is a 350 kD intracellular protein, ubiquitously expressed and mainly localized in the cytoplasm. Huntington’s disease (HD) is caused by a CAG triplet amplification in exon 1 of the corresponding gene resulting in a polyglutamine (polyQ) expansion at the N-terminus of Htt. Production of full-length Htt has been difficult in the past and so far a scalable system or process has not been established for recombinant production of Htt in human cells. The ability to produce Htt in milligram quantities would be a prerequisite for many biochemical and biophysical studies aiming in a better understanding of Htt function under physiological conditions and in case of mutation and disease. For scalable production of full-length normal (17Q) and mutant (46Q and 128Q) Htt we have established two different systems, the first based on doxycycline-inducible Htt expression in stable cell lines, the second on “gutless” adenovirus mediated gene transfer. Purified material has then been used for biochemical characterization of full-length Htt. Posttranslational modifications (PTMs) were determined and several new phosphorylation sites were identified. Nearly all PTMs in full-length Htt localized to areas outside of predicted alpha-solenoid protein regions. In all detected N-terminal peptides methionine as the first amino acid was missing and the second, alanine, was found to be acetylated. Differences in secondary structure between normal and mutant Htt, a helix-rich protein, were not observed in our study. Purified Htt tends to form dimers and higher order oligomers, thus resembling the situation observed with N-terminal fragments, although the mechanism of oligomer formation may be different.  相似文献   

20.
A novel Ca2+-binding protein (CaBP) was identified in Ehrlich-ascites-tumour cells and purified to homogeneity. The molecular mass of this protein is about 10.5 kDa as estimated by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis in the presence of SDS. CaBP has two Ca2+-binding sites that bind Ca2+ with a dissociation constant of about 3 x 10(-6)M. Ca2+ binding to CaBP decreases its electrophoretic mobility in urea/polyacrylamide gels, changes its u.v. spectrum, increases the intrinsic tyrosine fluorescence intensity and strengthens hydrophobic interaction with the phenyl-Sepharose matrix.  相似文献   

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